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DEEP DIVE ARTICLE TIPS & TRICKS YOUTUBE

10 Creator Equipment Mistakes That Cost You Subscribers

Most creator equipment mistakes cost you subscribers, not just money. Bad audio sends viewers away inside ten seconds. A lopsided budget leaves a professional camera stranded in terrible light. Gear bought too early gathers dust while the content suffers from the thing you didn’t fix. Across 500+ channel audits I keep seeing the same ten mistakes, and nearly all of them are cheaper to fix than people expect, and show up in your retention within a few uploads.

Here are the ten I run into most, with the specific fix for each. For the wider framework, see my Ultimate Creator Equipment Guide 2026.

Some product links below are affiliate links, so I may earn a small commission at no cost to you. It never changes the advice — most of the fixes here are cheap on purpose.

Mistake 1: Spending 70%+ of Budget on the Camera

The most common mistake by a distance. Someone puts £2,500 of a £3,000 budget into a Sony A7 IV body, leaves £500 for “everything else,” and ends up with lovely footage wrecked by tinny audio and patchy light.

Why it happens: the camera is the most visible bit of kit. Sensor size and 4K numbers are easy to compare, so people fixate on them. Audio and lighting are harder to put a spec on, so they slide down the list.

The fix: apply the 30/25/25/20 rule and hold the line. Cap the camera at 30% of the budget. A Sony ZV-E10 at £700 with strong audio and lighting beats an A7 IV at £2,500 with everything else neglected.

Reality check: on YouTube’s compressed output, an A7 IV and a ZV-E10 look almost identical to viewers. Nobody clicks away because a camera wasn’t full-frame enough.

Mistake 2: Ignoring Audio Until It’s Too Late

Audio is the single biggest lever on retention. A £150 wireless lav beats a £0 built-in camera mic by a mile, and a proper broadcast mic lifts the perceived authority of talking-head content.

Why it happens: audio is invisible. You watch your own footage on a quiet computer speaker, think “sounds fine,” and never hear the room echo, the keyboard, the aircon hum, the harsh S sounds.

The fix: budget at least 25% for audio. At the starter tier, the Rode Wireless Me (~£145) is hard to beat — reviewers rate it for being so simple it tempts people into taking audio seriously, and GainAssist keeps your levels in check. Just know it has no on-board recording and you set it via the Rode app rather than buttons. At the serious tier, the Shure MV7+ (~£280) gives you USB and XLR in one and rejects a lot of room noise, though you’ll want Shure’s software for the on-board tuning. Above roughly £10 CPM, the Shure SM7B (~£400) is the studio standard — SoundGuys rates its off-axis rejection for untreated rooms — but be clear-eyed that it’s not plug-and-play: it’s notoriously quiet and needs about 60dB of clean gain, so budget for a Cloudlifter and interface on top.

Reality check: listen to your own content on phone earbuds in a noisy café. If you can’t follow it there, your retention is bleeding quietly.

Mistake 3: Buying Gear Before Publishing Consistently

Someone decides to “get serious,” buys £2,500 of kit before their tenth video, and three months later has published four videos total while the kit gathers dust.

Why it happens: buying feels like progress. “I’m investing in my channel” is more satisfying than “I’m scripting and publishing every week.” But with no content, the gear makes nothing.

The fix: publish 30 videos on a phone plus £150 of starter kit before you upgrade. That’s six to eight months of steady weekly uploads. If you can’t do it with basic kit, expensive kit won’t rescue you. If you can, you’ve earned the upgrade with proven habits.

Reality check: every creator who made it has a pile of early videos shot on whatever they had. The work comes first; the gear earns its place after.

Mistake 4: Using a Desk Mic Next to a Mechanical Keyboard

A small mistake that quietly ruins a lot of setups. A good USB mic on a desk stand, a foot from a Cherry MX Blue keyboard, and every keypress lands right in the audio.

Why it happens: convenience. The mic sits in the natural gap between monitor and keyboard, and you don’t realise how much of that clatter it’s catching.

The fix: three options, rising in cost:

  1. Boom arm (~£30): lift the mic above the keyboard and angle it toward your mouth, away from the keys
  2. Silent-switch keyboard (~£120): a Cherry MX Silent Red or membrane board kills it at the source
  3. Wireless lavalier: mic on your body, no keyboard in the pickup at all

Reality check: record 30 seconds of normal typing with your current setup. If you can hear individual keypresses, so can your viewers.

Mistake 5: Relying on “Natural Window Light”

Someone films by a window for “free light.” Clouds roll through the shot, morning and afternoon videos look nothing alike, evening filming is off the table, and the channel loses any consistent look.

Why it happens: natural light sounds appealing and costs nothing. Then UK weather has its say.

The fix: get controllable artificial light. Even one Elgato Key Light Air (~£120) gives you the same light at any hour in any weather, and owners rate the soft, even output and app control. The trade-off worth knowing: it has no physical buttons, so control runs through the app or a Stream Deck over WiFi. Two lights at £240 changes the whole look.

Reality check: watch three of your own videos back to back. If they look visibly different despite the same filming spot, you’ve got a lighting consistency problem.

Mistake 6: No Backup Storage Strategy

Someone has 500GB of projects and source footage on a single 1TB drive. The drive fails. Five months of work gone, and the channel effectively restarts.

Why it happens: storage feels like plumbing, not production. “I’ll back up later” is the universal creator lie.

The fix: a 3-2-1 backup at minimum:

  • 3 copies of anything important
  • 2 different media (SSD plus external HDD)
  • 1 off-site copy (cloud backup — Backblaze is around £70/year for unlimited)

For live projects: an NVMe SSD for current work plus an external Samsung T7 (~£100 for 1TB) as backup. For archive: a large HDD in a NAS or enclosure.

Reality check: if your main drive died right now, how much would you lose? Anything above “nothing” means your backup is broken.

The fix is rarely the obvious upgrade.

In 500+ audits, the gear people think they need is almost never the thing holding the channel back. If you’re about to spend on kit and you’re not sure it’s the right call, book a free 30-minute discovery call and I’ll help you find the actual weak link first.

Book a free discovery call →

Mistake 7: Buying Expensive Cameras for 1080p Output

Someone buys a Sony A7 IV (6K capable) for content that goes out at 1080p. The extra resolution is never seen, eats storage and processing, and adds nothing to retention.

Why it happens: more resolution sounds better, 4K/6K reads as “professional,” and people feel they should shoot at maximum to futureproof.

The fix: shoot at the resolution you deliver. For YouTube, 1080p is still the most common viewing resolution, especially on mobile where most viewing happens. 4K delivery is growing but not required. Shooting 4K to deliver 1080p makes sense only if you’re cropping or reframing in post — otherwise it’s extra workflow for no gain.

Reality check: check your YouTube Analytics for viewing resolution. Most channels see 60%+ of views at 720p or below. Shooting 6K for phone viewers is pure overkill.

Mistake 8: Mixed Colour Temperature Lighting

Someone has a daylight key light (5600K), warm tungsten desk lamps (2900K), fluorescent ceiling lights (4000K), and a blue RGB strip behind the set. The camera’s white balance can’t decide what to correct for, and skin tones go strange.

Why it happens: lights get added one at a time, nobody checks colour temperature, household lighting mixes in, and RGB accents are fun but wreck colour.

The fix: run all your main lights at the same colour temperature (5600K daylight is the standard; 3200K tungsten suits a moodier, evening look). Turn household lights off while filming. Keep RGB for background separation only, never on your face. Set white balance manually, not auto.

Reality check: if your skin looks warm on one side of the frame and cool on the other, that’s mixed colour temperature.

Mistake 9: Cheap SD Cards for High-Bitrate Cameras

Someone runs a Sony A7C II recording 100+ Mbps in 4K on £12 cards with 30MB/s write speeds. The buffer fills, the camera stalls mid-record, and the footage corrupts. Hours gone.

Why it happens: SD cards look identical. Write speed versus read speed, V-rating versus UHS-rating — none of it is obvious, and £12 cards feel like a sensible saving next to £80 pro cards.

The fix: match the card to the camera’s bitrate. For 4K 10-bit, use V90-rated cards from reputable brands (Sony Tough, SanDisk Extreme Pro, ProGrade Digital), roughly £50–£120 per 128GB. Buy three and rotate them, so no single card is a single point of failure.

Reality check: check the manual for the camera’s minimum card speed. Running slower cards than specified is a reliable way to corrupt footage.

Mistake 10: Not Using a Wireless Lavalier for Moving Content

Someone shoots walkthroughs, demos or movement-heavy content with a shotgun or boom mic that doesn’t move with them. Pickup changes as they step closer and further, room noise rises and falls, and clarity wanders across a single video.

Why it happens: they bought “a good mic” — often a desk mic or shotgun — without matching it to the use case. The mic that works seated fails the moment you move.

The fix: anything with movement — product walkthroughs, cooking, travel, interviews — wants a wireless lav. The Rode Wireless Me (~£145) fixes it simply, with the caveat that it’s still a mic in the room, so a hard, echoey space needs a little taming. If you shoot two-person pieces or want a recorded backup track, step up to the Rode Wireless Go II (~£269) — the dual-channel standard with on-board recording, though the transmitter clips visibly to your shirt and it’s more than a solo seated creator needs.

Reality check: if you’ve ever noticed your audio change as you move in your own videos, your mic isn’t following you. Fix it before it becomes a pattern viewers notice.

Bonus Mistakes (Honourable Mentions)

These didn’t make the top ten but come up often enough to flag:

No pop filter or windshield on the mic

Plosives (your P, B and T sounds) pop distractingly without one. A £10 fix — add it to any mic that doesn’t have one built in.

Filming against a white wall

White walls bounce colour onto your face and give video that flat “webinar” feel. Add texture behind you (a bookshelf, plants, art) or intentional colour (a painted wall or fabric backdrop).

No second monitor for editing

Editing on one screen is a real drag on your speed. Timeline on one, preview on the other. A basic second monitor at around £180 is one of the best productivity buys a creator can make.

Recording in a room with hard floors and bare walls

Audible echo undoes the work of even an expensive mic. Acoustic foam panels (~£50), heavy curtains or a rug under the desk all help — just note foam tames reflections and echo, it doesn’t soundproof the room from outside noise.

Forgetting to charge batteries

Shoot day arrives, the battery’s at 4%, the shoot gets cancelled or rushed. Always have three-plus charged batteries ready before a shoot.

Using the kit lens forever

Kit lenses (18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 and the like) are versatile but look visibly cheap. A 35mm f/1.8 prime at around £250 is a real upgrade — better low light, better background blur, better perceived quality.

The Common Thread

Almost every one of these comes from the same root: treating gear as a list of separate purchases instead of one connected system. An expensive camera can’t paper over poor audio. A great mic can’t rescue inconsistent light. Pro lighting can’t fix a flat battery.

Fix the weakest link in the chain, not the most obvious upgrade. In audits I regularly find channels with £2,000 cameras that would gain far more from a £200 lighting fix than from any camera change. The question isn’t “what’s the best bit of gear I can buy?” It’s “what’s the weakest part of what I already have?”

How to Audit Your Own Setup

A quick self-audit:

  1. Watch three of your own videos back to back on phone earbuds
  2. Note the first three to five things that pull your attention off the content: uneven audio, harsh shadows, focus drift, echo, colour shift
  3. Rank those by severity
  4. Point your next upgrade at the top-ranked issue, whatever gear category it falls in

This beats any generic recommendation because it’s tuned to your channel’s actual weakness.

Frequently Asked Questions

What’s the single biggest equipment mistake creators make?

Over-prioritising the camera. In 500+ audits, the most common diagnosis is “kit is too camera-heavy, audio and lighting are underserved.” Fixing that lopsided allocation transforms channels more than any individual gear upgrade.

How do I know if my audio is actually bad?

Listen on phone earbuds in a noisy environment (café, train, walking outside). If you can’t follow the dialogue clearly, your audio is failing the mobile-viewer test — where most of your viewers actually consume content.

Should I fix mistakes by buying better gear or improving technique?

Depends on the mistake. Lighting consistency is 80% gear (you need controllable lights), 20% technique. Mic placement is 20% gear, 80% technique (same mic, different placement, huge quality difference). Audit the specific issue before assuming it’s a gear problem.

Can I really compete with a starter kit?

Yes. Many 100k+ subscriber channels produce content on setups totalling under £1,000. What they get right: clean audio (even if cheap), intentional lighting (even if simple), consistent production (same look across videos). Starter kit + production discipline beats pro kit + inconsistency.

How often should I audit my setup?

Every 10 videos or every 3 months, whichever comes first. Watch three recent videos critically, note the top issues, plan your next upgrade against the biggest current weakness.

What’s the cheapest single upgrade that makes the biggest difference?

For most creators, a Rode Wireless Me (£145) replacing built-in camera audio. The quality jump is huge and the price point is accessible to almost any creator.

Is it worth paying for professional gear audits?

For channels earning £2,000+/month, yes. A 30-minute audit routinely identifies 2–3 upgrades that pay for the audit multiple times over. For smaller channels, watching your own content critically plus applying the 30/25/25/20 rule covers 90% of the value.

What to Do Next

  1. Audit your current setup against the ten mistakes above — which are you making?
  2. Apply the 30/25/25/20 budget rule to see if your spending is balanced
  3. Follow the progression in my equipment upgrade roadmap to time your next upgrade
  4. See how your niche’s CPM shifts the priorities in high-CPM niche priorities
  5. Check niche-specific guidance for finance, tech, beauty, gaming, travel, courses, or VTubing
  6. Read the full Creator Equipment Guide 2026 for specific gear picks
  7. Want a professional channel and equipment audit? Book a free discovery call

Every one of these is fixable, and none of them needs the most expensive gear in the category. They need balanced spending, proper use, and honest self-assessment. Fix even three of the ten and you’ll be putting out visibly better content than most of your direct competition. Equipment is a system, not a spec sheet — and a system with one weak link underperforms a modest one with no weak link at all.

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SOCIAL MEDIA TIPS & TRICKS YOUTUBE

How to Start a New Podcast on YouTube

If you’re considering starting a podcast, YouTube offers a unique platform to host your content. With its rich ecosystem of creators and users, YouTube provides a fantastic opportunity for your podcast to be discovered by new audiences.

Additionally, the platform’s recent support for podcasts and its integration with YouTube Music mean that your podcast can be easily found and enjoyed by listeners across different platforms.

What is a Podcast on YouTube?

On YouTube, a podcast is structured as a playlist, with each podcast episode represented as a video within that playlist. Full-length episodes should be organized in the order in which they should be consumed. If your podcast has multiple seasons, they should all be included in the same playlist.

Benefits of Podcasting on YouTube

When you create a podcast on YouTube, you can enjoy several perks including:

  • Inclusion in YouTube Music
  • Podcast badges on watch and playlist pages
  • A spotlight on youtube.com/podcasts to attract new listeners
  • Official Search cards
  • Easy discovery from the watch page to help listeners find your episodes
  • Recommendations to new listeners with similar interests
  • Improved search features to help your audience find your podcast

However, please note that some playlists may not be eligible for podcast features, even if they are designated as podcasts. This can occur if the content isn’t owned by the creator, for example.

How to Start a New Podcast on YouTube

Creating a new podcast on YouTube is simple and straightforward:

  1. Within YouTube Studio, click Create, and then select New podcast.
  2. From the pop-up, select Create a new podcast.
  3. Enter your podcast details, including the podcast title, description, visibility (public or private), and a square podcast thumbnail.
  4. Click Create to save your new podcast

Remember that each podcast episode on YouTube is represented by a video. MP3s can’t be turned into podcasts on YouTube. To create a podcast, upload or add videos to your podcast’s playlist

Adding Episodes to Your Podcast

You can add episodes to your podcast by either uploading new videos or adding existing videos:

  1. Within YouTube Studio, go to Content, then Podcasts.
  2. Select your podcast.
  3. Click Add videos, then either Upload videos (for new videos) or Add your existing videos (for existing videos).
  4. For new videos, upload the videos that you’d like to add to your podcast and enter the video details. Click Create to save changes.
  5. For existing videos, select the videos that you want to add to your podcast. Click Add to playlist and select your podcast from the list. Click Save to add videos to your podcast

Other Useful Features

Setting an Existing Playlist as a Podcast

If you have an existing playlist that you’d like to designate as a podcast, you can do so by:

  1. Within YouTube Studio, go to Content, then Playlists.
  2. Hover over the playlist that you want to designate as a podcast.
  3. Click Menu, then Set as podcast.
  4. Review your podcast’s details and add a square podcast thumbnail. Podcast details include title, description, and who can view your podcast on YouTube.
  5. Click Done to confirm your changes

Editing the Order of Episodes

To edit the order in which your episodes are consumed, reorder them within your podcast playlist:

  1. Within YouTube Studio, go to Content, then Podcasts.
  2. Click Edit on the podcast that you’d like to update.
  3. From the podcast details page

I’m sorry, I couldn’t find any information about a feature to automatically order podcast episodes by release date on YouTube. It appears that the default order of episodes within a podcast playlist needs to be manually set in the YouTube Studio.

Here’s how to do that:

  1. Within YouTube Studio, go to Content and then Podcasts.
  2. Click Edit on the podcast that you’d like to update.
  3. From the podcast details page, click on the Default video order menu and choose how you want your videos to be sorted.
  4. Click Save in the upper right-hand corner to confirm the changes

The following tables showcase the growth and adoption of podcasts:

Table 1: Growth of Podcast Listeners (United States)

Year Percentage of US Population (aged 12 and older)
2017 40%
2018 44%
2019 51%
2020 55%
2021 57% (estimated)

Source: Edison Research, The Infinite Dial

Table 2: Podcast Consumption Habits (United States)

Year Average Number of Podcasts Listened to Per Week
2017 5
2018 6
2019 7
2020 8
2021 8 (estimated)

Source: Podcast Consumer Tracker

Table 3: Number of Podcast Shows Worldwide

Year Number of Active Podcasts (in millions)
2018 0.5
2019 0.8
2020 1.7
2021 2.2 (estimated)

Source: Podcast Insights